Forseter House and the Royal School House, Raphoe, County Donegal

Forseter House and the Royal School House, Raphoe

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/40833007/raphoe-demesne-raphoe-donegal

Detached two-bay two-storey house, built c. 1890, having advanced gable-fronted bay to the east end of the front elevation (north) with slightly recessed flat-roofed sections to either side (east and west), single-storey extension to the west end of main body of building, and with two-bay two-storey return to the rear (south). Pitched natural slate roofs to main body of building, gable-fronted bay and return having cast-iron rainwater goods, clay ridge tiles, projecting rendered eaves course and two rendered chimneystacks with clay pots over. Hipped natural slate roof to single-storey block to the west. Ruled-and-lined cement rendered walls. Square-headed window openings to main body of building and return having two-over-two pane timber sliding sash windows; segmental-headed window opening to the gable-fronted bay at first floor level having paired one-over-one pane timber sliding sash windows with central timber mullion; segmental-headed window openings to the west elevation of gable-fronted breakfront having timber sliding sash windows. Majority of sash windows are hornless. Segmental-headed doorway to the gable-fronted bay having timber panelled door with bolection mouldings, overlight with leaded coloured glass, and sidelights over timber panels with bolection mouldings. Stone threshold and step to entrance. Set slightly back from road to the north-east of the centre of Raphoe. Sections of rubble stone boundary walls to either side.

Appraisal

This house, probably originally dating to the very end of the nineteenth century, retains its original form and character. Its visual expression is enhanced by the retention of salient fabric such as the timber sliding sash windows, timber panelled door with bolection mouldings, and the natural slate roof that all help add a satisfying patina. The absence of horns is unusual in windows of this era, and may suggest the involvement of a craftsman from Scotland where omission of window horns was standard practice. The unusual form of this building with advanced gable-fronted bay with flat-roofed sections to either side, and its relationship with the street (set slightly back but opening out unto street and not behind a wall etc.), suggests that this building may have been originally built as something other than a private dwelling, perhaps as a hall of some description. This intact building makes a positive contribution to William Street, and is an addition to the built heritage of Raphoe.

Coolavin, Monasteraden, Co Sligo

Coolavin, Monasteraden, Co Sligo 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 89. “(MacDermot, Prince of Coolavin/IFR) A late-Victorian house built 1897-98 by Rt Hon Hugh MacDermot, The MacDermot, Prince of Coolavin, to the design of James Franklin Fuller. Of cut stone, with red sandstone dressings; rather in the style of an early C17 hall in the North of England. Steep porch-gable, decorated with balls on pedestals; dormer-gables on either side. Mullioned and sash windows, the latter, rather surprisingly, for their period, with Georgian astragals. End gables, also with pedestals and balls.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/32321002/coolavin-house-clogher-clogher-co-sligo

Coolavin House, CLOGHER, Clogher, County Sligo

Detached multiple-bay two- and three-storey stone house, built 1898, to designs by architect James Franklin Fuller. Complex plan arranged around central three-storey block projecting as gabled breakfronts to east and west; two-storey hip-roofed front block to south of central block with gabled breakfront, gabled dormers and single-storey canted bay window to east of front elevation, single-storey flat-roofed bay window to east elevation, two-storey wing projecting to north from east end of central block dropping to single-storey L-plan wing returning west; two-storey wing projecting to north from west end of central block, single-storey gabled porch projecting from east side of north gable; various single-storey infill buildings between west and east rear (north) wings, enclosed courtyard to rear of building. Pitched and hipped slate roofs, clay ridge and hip tiles, rock-faced ashlar stone canted-cap chimneystacks with yellow clay pots, polished ashlar sandstone verge copings with corbelled springers, knops to main gable apexes and springers to main entrance gable, moulded cast-iron gutters on canted ashlar stone eaves corbel course, rectangular cast-iron downpipes. Squared-and-snecked rockfaced ashlar limestone walling, gablets with loops over some first floor windows, armorial plaque in gable over main entrance, sandstone quoins, chamfered sandstone capping to limestone plinth. Square-headed window openings, block-and-start splayed sandstone surrounds, flush sills; transomed and mullioned windows to main entrance breakfront and east breakfront, leaded-light stained glass fixed lights, painted multi-pane-over-one timber sash windows elsewhere. Round-headed main entrance door opening set in polished ashlar sandstone breakfront flanked by transomed sidelights, moulded archivolt with projecting keystone, flanking pilasters with fluting to bottom sections on moulded dado sill course on dadoes, plain frieze over with moulded cornice and central dentilled segmental pediment, varnished vertically-sheeted and studded timber double doors with decorative wrought-iron strap hinges, stone steps. Corbelled square-headed door opening to north porch, splayed polished ashlar sandstone surround, painted vertically-sheeted and studded timber door. Segmental-headed gateway in north elevation leading to enclosed yard, chamfered polished ashlar sandstone surround, wrought-iron gates. Bitmac forecourt, ha-ha to west, surrounded by mature farm and parkland, approached by driveway from north. 

Appraisal 

This striking eclectically-styled house combines grey limestone and red sandstone in its complex asymmetrical elevational treatments. High quality craftsmanship is evident throughout and most original details survive. The unusual sash window design is particularly noteworthy. 

http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-list.jsp?letter=C 

McParlan described the Coolavin of 1802 as a “delightful retreat”. The house at Clogher was offered for sale as part of the McDermott estate in 1852. By the time of Griffith’s Valuation it was occupied by Joseph Holmes and was valued at £16. In 1906 Coolavin was valued at £35. The house now known as Coolavin was built in the 1890s replacing an earlier house near the same location. This latter house is still extant and occupied. The original house at Clogher is now derelict.   

Billis Grange (or The Grange), Drumallaght, County Cavan 

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan 

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/40403305/billis-grange-drummallaght-co-cavan

Detached five-bay two-storey house, built c.1890, with projecting two-storey gabled outer bays flanking recent single-storey entrance, south gable probably post 1910, two-storey return to south-west. Alterations comprising two-storey rear extension and timber conservatory to south c.2000, single-storey outbuildings to west, south-west and north, converted c.2005, forming rectangular yard to rear. Pitched slate roof with perforated clay ridge tile, rendered replacement chimneystacks with recent stepped profiles and historic clay pots to front and rear sections. Roof overhangs at eaves and gables with decorative timber trusses to gables, recent timber bargeboards, replacement rainwater goods. Smooth rendered walls with channel jointed smooth quoins and smooth plinth. Two-over-two timber sash windows with stone sills. Bay windows to east gables with timber uprights at corners supporting slate roof with two-over-two timber sash windows. Windows above bays with recent pediments on brackets. Recent entrance porch with precast concrete columns, round-headed door opening with fanlight and recent timber door. Recent projection to south-east gable with timber doors flanked by precast concrete columns and balcony over. Outbuildings with replacement pitched slate roofs, altered and new openings with recent brick dressing, recent limestone sills and uPVC windows. Water channels connecting former mill race with lake in west and Nadreegeel Lough to south-west.  

Appraisal 

Despite having lost some of its original fabric, the house retains some of its original form and much of its landscape setting. It retains its picturesque character expressed with balanced elevation, projecting bays, and decorative elements. The house can be seen from the main road to the east across extensive picturesque parkland and adds to the historic character of the surrounding area. The landscape contains a number of historic water channels and a mill race that connect to lakes in the west and to a former corn mill to the east. 

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers, POA 

5 beds5 baths590 m2 

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.

A truly exceptional fine Victorian Period Home, Dating from circa 1890 on 6.17 Acres of magnificent, landscaped grounds and parkland. The present owners carried out extensive restoration and building works to the property in 1999 /2000 to meticulous exacting standards. That embrace the best of the original structure with additional striking and deferential accommodation. The thoughtful appreciation of vintage and modern has created a truly magical family home in idyllic surroundings. In addition. This important sale also presents a unique opportunity to acquire a stunning Social, Commercial or Corporate Venue. The extensive accommodation comprises an imposing reception hall. formal drawing room and dining room. family room. recreation room. conservatory. study. large kitchen breakfast living room. 5 bedrooms.4 bathrooms. indoor swimming pool / ballroom. gymnasium. tennis court and pavilion. lake and boating amenity. mews house. carport. coach house. A logic gated entrance opens to a tree lined winding driveway, that invites you towards and across a picturesque bridge and stream, to the forecourt of the main house. The driveway bisects skirting around the parkland and grounds towards the lake and up to the outer rear yard and courtyard of the property. Decorative standard lamps illuminate the driveway and grounds. The parkland and gardens are beautifully presented and maintained with mature tree stands and shrubbery, pathways and sun patios. A lakeside gazebo and seating area offers the ultimate in quietude. 

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.

Accommodation  

The main house measures 590 m2 approximately, laid out over two floors and a return, with five principal reception rooms and five bedrooms. An impressive portico frames the main entrance into an elegant and imposing and welcoming grand reception hall. Reception Hall 7.37 x 6.94 m with gas fire inset. Alcove with window seat and guest w.c. Drawing room 7.10 x 5.05 m. with bay window open fireplace and French Door to garden. Dining room 4.71 x 4.08 with bay window open fireplace. Kitchen Breakfast Living room 11.81 x 4.8 m. with Bespoke John Daly Kitchen.4 oven Aga and 2 ring hob. Built in Neff appliances and waste disposal unit and Liscannor stone floor. Hamptons Conservatory 4.47 X 3.16 m. with French door to garden. Rear hallway. Boot room 2.56 x 2.27 m. Utility room 3.60 x 2.52 m. Recreation room 6.65 x 5.21 m with stove and stairs to study. Family room 6.86 x 5.21 m. with floor to ceiling brick fireplace and solid fuel stove complimented by rustic timber ceiling beams and solid wood floor. Ballroom / Swimming Pool 17.00 x 9.30 with dressing room w.c. gallery and plant room. Original winding staircase. Landing return with full height fan window. First floor landing and corridor 5.617 x 1.24 m. Master Suite – Inner corridor 3.08 x 1.21 m. with storage. Spacious bright Master Bedroom 7.11 x 6.06 m. with Juliet Balcony. Bathroom 4.13 x 3.00 m. with twin pedestal wash basins, bath, shower and w.c. Bedroom 2. 4.69 x 4.03 m. with dual aspect. Bedroom 3. 4.97 x 2.73 m. overlooking the front grounds. Jack and Jill Bathroom 2.73 x 2.26 m. with shower, wash basin and w.c. Return. Corridor 6.214 x 3.764 m. Linen cupboard. Bedroom 4. 4.46 x 4.00 with rear aspect. Bathroom 3.00 x 2.55 m. with shower, wash basin and w.c. Bedroom 5. 4.24 x 4.18 m. with rear aspect and interconnecting door to study 4.16 x 3.45 m. Courtyard: Mews – Hall. Livingroom 6.59 x 4.70 m. with solid fuel stove and rustic ceiling beams. Kitchen 3.37 x 2.76 m. opening to Dining room 4.71 x 3.71 m. Shower room with w.c 2 Upper floor rooms 4.56 x 2.61 m. and 4.1 x 4.00 m. Shower room and w.c. 3 Bay Car Port 10.34 x 6.22 m. Gymnasium 10.33 x 5.58. Tennis Court. Pavilion 9.4 x 3.35 m. with shaded south facing veranda. Outer Yard – Coach house /store 12.8 x 3.8 m. 

Features  

Intricate ceiling roses with decorative cornicing complimented by chandeliers and typical floor to ceiling height. Moulded skirtings and architraves. High mantle marble Victorian style fireplaces. And solid wood floors to 3 main reception rooms. Original staircase. Iconic portico fan light. 5 Bay windows. Double glazed sash windows. Self-contained Master suite. Indoor swimming pool / ballroom. Tennis Court. Lake amenity. 

BER Details  

BER: C3 

Directions  

The property is discreetly tucked away off the Dublin / Cavan / Donegal Road between Virginia 6 km. and Cavan 23 km. A 50-minute drive to J6 M50 and 60 minutes to Dublin Airport. Hourly Dublin Bus Eireann service passes the gate. Airport Express service stop at Virginia. A wide choice of primary and post primary schools in the area and environs with a considerable range of shopping facilities and social amenities within easy proximity. Numerous leisure and sport pursuits at the doorstep. Hunting with the Ballymacad’s. Golf in Virginia, Slieve Russell and Headfort. Rugby and numerous other field sport options close by in Virginia and Cavan. Forest Walks at Virginia Lake and Killykeen Forest Park. Cuilcagh Mountain walks. In the county of the lakes, you can fish to your hearts content. Or perhaps just stay at home and enjoy the swimming pool, tennis, gymnasium or a leisurely boat trip and picnic on the lake! 

Viewing Details  

Strictly by prior appointment only with Gerard Farrelly. McPeake Auctioneers. 01 827 2300.

Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.
Billis Grange, Drumallaght, County Cavan for sale June 2024 photographs courtesy McPeake Auctioneers.

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, A82 FP46 836.92 m2 on 6.5 acres Cavan for sale Jan 2025 courtesy Colliers, €1,600,000

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

Delightful restored and extended period house (1890) together with guest cottage, indoor heated swimming pool, 6.5 acres of colourful grounds and lake frontage. Carried out over a 2 year period (1999/2000) the total restoration, with great care taken to preserve the period character, involved stripping the house back to the bare bones and virtually rebuilding, with concrete floors on the ground and first floors, reroofing, wiring, plumbing and the installation of oil fired central heating and double glazing throughout. Not satisfied with just undertaking the enormous restoration of the house the owners added a further sitting room and impressive entertainment room as well as the spacious indoor swimming pool which is currently floored for a family wedding. All outbuildings were also restored including the coach house which is now a 2 bedroom guest cottage/mews and the charming summer house which with its terrace overlooks the grounds. The property is discreetly tucked away off the Dublin/Cavan/Donegal Road between Virginia 6Km, and Cavan 23 Km. A 50-minute drive to J6 M50 and 60 minutes to Dublin Airport.

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

Accommodation 

The pillared entrance porch leads to the truly impressive reception hall with its feature marble fireplace and oak flooring. Off this radiate the comfortable drawing room, dining room, stairs hall with cloakroom and the fine staircase. The hall opens to the long open plan kitchen/breakfast room with living area which at one end opens to the south facing conservatory and at the other end leads to a boot room and utility room and the family room which in turn connects to the grand entertainment room with high beamed ceiling, feature open fireplace and mezzanine level. Upstairs there are 5 bedrooms, 2 share a Jack & Jill bathroom, the master is ensuite and there is a family bathroom.

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

Features 

• Totally restored and extended period house • Cut stone coach house/mews • Summer house with terrace • Hardcourt tennis court • Frontage to coarse fishing with landing stage • Delightful woodland and grounds • 3 bay car port with gym over

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

BER Details 

BER: C3 BER No.116788886 Energy Performance Indicator:206.9 kWh/m²/yr

Viewing Details 

Strictly by appointment through the joint sole selling agents: Please email Marcus Magnier to arrange a viewing Email: marcus.magnier@colliers.com

The Grounds 

The house is set well off the country road and is approached via a long tree lined avenue with a millrace on either side, each of which flowed to separate corn mills in Victorian times. The avenue leads to an extensive forecourt parking and divides going through the manicured grounds to the courtyard. The grounds are mainly in lawns with colourful beds interspersed with walkways leading to the lake. There is also a hardcourt tennis court.

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

The Mews 

A charming 2 storey cut stone building with on the ground floor a living room/dining room, kitchen, shower room and upstairs 2 bedrooms and a shower room. The upstairs also connects to the large gym

Outoffices 

The Swimming Pool This impressive structure of 158 sq. m. has a range of French doors opening to the grounds, a mezzanine area and a plant room. Currently a timber floor covers the pool as it was used recently for a family wedding. The Summer House The main room has exposed stone walls and folding patio doors opening to a large paved terrace. There is also a small snug bar with counter. Carport & Gym A modern 3 bay car port with stairs to 57 sqm gym.

Location 

The property is discreetly tucked away off the Dublin/Cavan/Donegal Road between Virginia 6Km, and Cavan 23 Km. A 50-minute drive to J6 M50 and 60 minutes to Dublin Airport. Hourly Dublin Bus Eireann service passes the gate. Airport Express service stop at Virginia. A wide choice of primary and post primary schools in the area and environs with a considerable rage of shopping facilities and social amenities within easy proximity. Numerous leisure and sport pursuits at the doorstep. Hunting with the Ballymacad’s. Golf in Virginia, Slieve Russell and Headfort. Or perhaps just stay at home and enjoy the swimming pool, tennis gymnasium or a leisurely boat trip and picnic on the lake!

The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.
The Grange, Dromallard, Virginia, County Cavan for sale Jan 2025, photograph courtesy Colliers.

Cill-Alaithe, Killala, Co Mayo 

Cill-Alaithe, Killala, Co Mayo 

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 83. A two storey mansion of ca. 1900 with a small pediment in the centre of its entrance front, above a balustraded portico of pink marble columns wiht Romanesque capitals. Pedimented projection in side elevation.” 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/31203022/cill-alaithe-killala-killala-co-mayo

Cill-Alaithe, Killala, Co Mayo, courtesy National Inventory. 

Detached three-bay (three-bay deep) two-storey country house, built 1891-4, on a square plan centred on single-bay full-height pedimented breakfront with (single-storey) prostyle distyle Ionic portico to ground floor. Occupied, 1901; 1911. Sold, 1923. In alternative use, 1939-43. Sold, 1943. Sold, 1970. Sold, 1997. Restored, 1998. Sold, 2003. For sale, 2010. Now disused. Hipped slated roof on a quadrangular plan centred on lantern; pitched (gabled) slate roof (breakfront), clay ridge tiles, paired limestone ashlar central chimney stacks on limestone ashlar bases having cornice capping on thumbnail beaded consoles supporting yellow terracotta pots, and cast-iron rainwater goods on cut-limestone monolithic cornice on ogee consoles retaining cast-iron hoppers and downpipes. Rendered walls on benchmark-inscribed cut-limestone chamfered cushion course on snecked rock faced limestone plinth with rusticated limestone ashlar piers to corners. Square-headed central door opening behind (single-storey) prostyle distyle Ionic portico approached by flight of four cut-limestone steps with paired polished pink granite columns on plinths having responsive engaged columns supporting cornice on blind frieze below parapet, and timber doorcase with monolithic pilasters supporting dentilated cornice on consoles framing timber panelled double doors having sidelights on panelled risers below overlight. Paired square-headed window openings (first floor) with cut-limestone sill, and cut-limestone “bas-relief” surround with monolithic pilasters supporting archivolts centred on keystones framing one-over-one timber sash windows. Square-headed window openings (ground floor) with cut-limestone sill course, and cut-limestone surrounds with panelled pilasters supporting pedimented hood mouldings on blind friezes on fluted consoles framing one-over-one timber sash windows. Square-headed window openings (first floor) with cut-limestone sill course, and cut-limestone “bas-relief” block-and-start surrounds framing one-over-one timber sash windows. Interior including (ground floor): central vestibule retaining encaustic tiled floor, reclaimed cut-fossilised marble Classical-style chimneypiece, and plasterwork cornice to ceiling; square-headed door opening into hall with glazed timber panelled double doors having sidelights on panelled risers below overlight; hall retaining carved timber Classical-style surrounds to door openings framing timber panelled doors, and decorative plasterwork cornice to ceiling; Composite columnar screen into staircase hall; top-lit double-height staircase hall retaining diagonal timber boarded staircase on a dog leg plan with turned timber “spindle” balusters supporting carved timber banister terminating in finial-topped timber newels, Composite columnar screen to landing centred on lantern on panelled risers, carved timber surrounds to door openings framing timber panelled doors, and plasterwork cornice to ceiling; drawing room (south-east) retaining carved timber surround to door opening framing timber panelled door with carved timber surrounds to window openings framing timber panelled shutters on panelled risers, carved timber Classical-style chimneypiece, and decorative plasterwork cornice to ceiling on decorative plasterwork frieze; dining room (north-east) retaining carved timber surrounds to door openings framing timber panelled doors with carved timber surrounds to window openings framing timber panelled shutters on panelled risers, carved timber Jacobean-style chimneypiece, and decorative plasterwork cornice to ceiling; and carved timber surrounds to door openings to remainder framing timber panelled doors with carved timber surrounds to window openings framing timber panelled shutters on panelled risers. Set in unkempt landscaped grounds including terraces centred on flights of seven moss-covered cut-limestone steps. 

Appraisal 

A country house erected for Miss August Gertrude Knox (1846-1924) to designs by Richard Chaytor Millar (1844-1915) of Great Brunswick Street [Pearse Street], Dublin (Country Life 8th November 1902, –), representing an important component of the late nineteenth-century domestic built heritage of north County Mayo with the architectural value of the composition, one recalling the Millar and Symes-restructured Ballina House (1892-4) in Ballina (see 31303024), confirmed by such attributes as the deliberate alignment maximising on panoramic vistas overlooking terraced grounds with Killala Bay as a backdrop in the near distance; the compact near-square plan form centred on a pillared portico; the slight diminishing in scale of the openings on each floor producing a graduated visual impression with the principal “apartments” defined by Classically-detailed polygonal bay windows; the silver-grey limestone dressings demonstrating good quality workmanship; and the pedimented roofline. Having been well maintained, the elementary form and massing survive intact together with substantial quantities of the original fabric, both to the exterior and to the interior where a fossilised marble chimneypiece reclaimed from Rappa Castle [SMR MA030-019—-; Craig and Garner 1976, 41]; contemporary joinery; a top-lit staircase hall allegedly modelled after the Knox family seat at Castlereagh (see 31301418; Irish Independent 30th May 2003, –); chimneypieces; and decorative plasterwork enrichments, all highlight the considerable artistic potential of the composition. Furthermore, an adjacent stable complex (see 31203023); and lengthy walled garden (1894), all continue to contribute positively to the group and setting values of an estate having subsequent connections with the Killala-born Brooklyn-based attorney James H. Gilvarry (1876-1947); and Alexander “Alex” Knox Miller (1906-95) ‘[of] Cill-Alaithe…and Millbrook, Straidarran, County Derry’ (cf. 31203003). 

Cill-Alaithe, Killala, Co Mayo, courtesy National Inventory. 

 
http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-list.jsp?letter=C 

Described as ‘an Italianate country house’ (National Inventory of Architectural Heritage) built in the early 1890s, on the outskirts of the town of Killala, to the design of Richard Chaytor Millar, for Miss Augusta Gertrude Knox Gore. The grounds included a stable complex and walled garden. Sold in 1923 to James Gilvarry, a local man who had become wealthy in America. In the early 1940s it became the property of Alexander Knox Miller and is often known as ‘Miller’s House’. Since 1970 it has had a number of owners and is currently (2016) under restoration. 

Cill-Alaithe House  

Killala, Co. Mayo 
 

A car parked in front of a brick building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The Entrance Front of Cill-Alaithe House, once home to Augusta Gertrude Knox Gore 
Photo dates from October 2014 
     Copyright ICHC 

Cill-Alaithe House is situated near the town of Killala, in Co. Mayo and was designed and built for Miss Augusta Gertrude Knox Gore in the 1890’s, a remarkable expression of independence considering the few rights that women had at this time. The house was constructed on the land of the nearby former Bishop’s Palace which had been purchased by her brother Sir Charles James Knox Gore, 2nd Baronet of Belleek Castle in 1874. Sir Charles died on the 22nd December 1890, unmarried with a personal estate valued at £70,339 2s 2d. As Sir Charles had died with no male heirs, the title of Baronet died with him, having only been awarded to his father twenty two years earlier. The estate at Belleek Manor and its land near Ballina, was entailed under the terms of Charles’s fathers will, and was thus divided between his older sisters. In the 1870’s the Knox Gore estate extended to over 22,000 acres of land in Mayo with a further 8,500 in Sligo.  However it was Sir Charles’s sizable personal fortune, which was not entailed, that provided Augusta with the independent means with which to build her own home.  

A tree in a forest

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The grave of Charles James Knox Gore and his dog Phizzie buried nearby 
in the demense of Belleek Manor overlooking the River Moy. It was the death 
of Charles and the money that Augusta inherited from him that allowed her to 
construct her home in Killala 
     Copyright ICHC 

Under the terms of this will Charles appointed a number of executors which included his sister Augusta Gertrude Knox. She was well provided for under the terms of the will, she received all her brother’s silver plate, linen, china, books, wines, liquors, furniture, household effects, guns together with all his carriages and horses in Belleek Manor. However he also left her a large sum of money, in the amount of £20,000, which would allow Augusta to construct the house in Killala. Charles also recorded in his will that he desired to be buried in the demesne around Belleek Manor, in an area that he had pointed out previously to Augusta. It is obvious that Charles held his sister in high regard, as once the finances of his estate were settled after his death, any residue was to be placed in a trust and the income paid to Augusta. She was the only trustee of her brother’s estate who had the power to appoint new trustees and it was she who had the final say over her deceased brothers investments, Charles also stated that Augusta had the right to reside at Belleek Manor for a period of six months after his death to allow her to make arrangements for a new residence for herself. Charles had left to his sister, Mrs Saunders ( who inherited Belleek Manor under the terms of her father will), the Warwick vase, two candelabra and the oak furniture in the castle. However if Augusta was refused by her sister the period of six months residence in the manor, Mrs. Saunders forsook these items, which causes one to think that relations were not good between the sisters. 
 

A castle on top of a building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The Entrance Front of Belleek Castle, Ballina, Co. Mayo 
The home of Augusta Knox Gore before she built her home in Killala 
     Copyright ICHC 

Augusta Gertrude Knox was born circa 1846 and was the daughter of Sir Arthur and Lady Sarah Knox Gore of Belleek Manor outside Ballina, Co. Mayo. Augusta’s mother, Lady Sarah, whom Arthur Knox Gore married in 1829, was the daughter of Colonel Charles Nesbitt Knox of Castle Lacken near Killala. Arthur and Sarah’s marriage produced a family of two sons and six daughters. Sir Arthur, who became a baronet in 1868, brought the railway to Ballina and vowed that he would travel on the first train to arrive in the station in the town. He was true to his word, but he arrived contained within a coffin as he died in the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin in 1873. Augusta was said to have be treated badly by her mother who preferred her other daughters and often let it known to the staff of Belleek Manor that the needs of her other daughters came before the needs of Augusta’s. As a result of this treatment in her childhood she grew up to be a very disagreeable woman in later life. It appears that Augsuta’s mother, Lady Sarah thought herself better than others in the extended family and landed classes in the locality at the time.  Augusta’s sister and Lady Sarah’s daughter, Agnes Frances Nina Knox Gore of Belleek Manor married Utred Knox of nearby Mount Falcon in 1875. However her mother Lady Sarah, in her estimation considered Utred’s family home, Hollywood House (also known as Mount Falcon as it was its predecessor), not suitable as a residence for her daughter having grown up in Belleek Manor. Utred had inherited £7,000 from his father but had to borrow a further £14,000 in order to complete a new house for his new bride. The new home was designed by the architect James Franklin Fuller, however the debt that Utred incurred worried himself and Nina for the rest of their married life. When Lady Sarah died aged 77 at Mount Falcon in 1888, she made no provision or bequest in her will to her daughter Augusta despite leaving an estate valued at £6,822 which passed in most part to her daughter Agnes Frances Nina Knox. Lady Sarah’s funeral was strictly private, was held at 4 am in the morning when she was buried with her husband in Belleek Wood under the monument designed by Fuller. Therefore Augusta, possibly in awe of her sister’s home at Mount Falcon and having grown up in Belleek Manor, would have had plenty of inspiration when it came to designing her own home in Killala. It is quite possible that Augusta had inherited her mother’s conceit and pretentious nature which now could be expressed with the inheritance received the from her brother. Augusta probably felt that the new house in Killala was necessary for someone of her social class considering the other homes of family members such as Belleek Manor and Mount Falcon. 
 

A castle on top of a lush green field

Description automatically generated, Picture 
Mount Falcon, Ballina, Co. Mayo, the home of Augusta’s sister Nina who married Utred Knox.  
Nina’s mother declared that a new house of stature had to be built as Utred’s previous home  
was not suitable for her daughter. Mount Falcon was therefore built by Utred in the 1870’s 
 to keep his mother-in-law happy. Copyright ICHC 

On the 16th May 1891, it was reported,in The Western People, that the contract had been awarded for the construction of a house for Miss Knox Gore in Killala at a cost of £8,000. What is interesting about the date is that is within the six month period mentioned in Charles’s will. In the same paper in the same month, a John Goode, a contractor based in Killala, placed an advertisement looking for a number of masons and stone cutters to help with the construction of an ‘extensive villa at Killala’. At this time Miss Knox Gore was lobbying the Board of Guardians of the nearby workhouse. Her solicitor, Mr. Garvey, told the board that Miss Knox Gore was ‘ anxious to attach portion of the workhouse grounds for the villa residence she intends to build on her property near the town’. While the board seen no issue with the request, they were concerned that it might have some effect on a proposal to turn the workhouse into an industrial training school in the near future.  

A car parked on the side of a building

Description automatically generated, Picture 
Cill-Alaithe House outside Kilala was built in the 1890’s to Augusta’s specification 
Photo dates from October 2014 
     Copyright ICHC 

One year later in June 1892, The Western People, reported that ’ the handsome mansion which Miss Knox is building for herself near Killala is drawing rapidly to a finish. It is a very imposing structure, and commands unrivaled marine and land views. We wish Miss Knox Gore many years to enjoy her new home’. The architectural firm who are are said to have designed the house were Millar and Symes, who were an architectural partnership based in Dublin, formed in 1874. It was recorded by the architect, R.C. Millar, in his diary that he made visits to other Knox homes, Mount Falcon and Castle Gore between 1892 and 1894. The house in Killala is said to have been built between 1893 and 1894, however as we can see from reports in the local press that the house was built between 1891 and 1892 however it could have been 1894 by the time the gardens and courtyard were completed. It is recorded that the architect was staying with the Knox family while he oversaw his West of Ireland commission. It is said that the Knox Gore’s instructed the architect to visit and incorporate ideas from ten of the stateliest houses in England. However the architect may have been inspired by the Knox’s own homes in Mayo, as the interior of the completed Cill Alaithe contains a chimney piece from Rappa Castle together with items from other Knox homes in Ballina. One of the fireplaces came from the residence of the Colonel King in Ballina, which is now the offices of Mac Hales Solicitors in the town. However over the years, I have heard other architectural historians imply that the house may have been the work of James Franklin Fuller, who had completed a number of projects for the Knox family in the previous years. Also the entrance gates to Belleek Castle were commissioned by Augusta’s brother, Charles, from Fuller the architect in the 1870’s together with a monument over the grave of their father. It should be noted that Charles purchased the land in Killala on which Augusta’s new house would be built in 1874. Would it be possible that Fuller had provided an outline design at that time in the 1870’s for the house in Killala which was later developed by Millar and Symes when it came to building the house in the 1890’s . However this is just conjecture as Fuller was notorious for destroying his own records. 

A picture containing building, table, chair, pier

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The top lit staircase in the Cill-Alaithe was said to have been inspired by another Knox home  
near Killala known as Castlereagh, which is now demolished. Photo taken in 2014 
     Copyright ICHC 

The top lit walnut staircase of the house in Killala was said to have been modeled on another Knox Family home at Castlereagh which was demolished in the 1930’s. The completed house in Killala is in the Italianate architectural style which would have been the height of fashion at the time. The house was named Cill-Alaithe, which is the Irish for the name of the town of Killala. At the time of the 1901 census, Augusta Gertrude Knox Gore is aged 54 and living in the house with a large number of servants, her income is derived from dividends and land, with her religion being described as Plymouth Brethren. Present in the house on the night of the census is Joseph Valentine Russell, a land steward, aged 31 and member of the Church of Ireland from Sligo. There is a headstone along the side avenue to the house in memory of Joseph who died in 1912 and is said to have been more than just a close friend of Miss Knox Gore, however one thinks this is unlikely considering the age difference. Joseph died on the 27th March 1912 , his death certificate records that he died of heart failure and that a Martin Divine was present at his death which occurred in Killala, he was aged 42 and his profession is listed as being a carpenter, Also present in the house at the time of the 1901 census were James Devine from Mayo aged 40, a butler, Mary Devine aged 47, the cook, Jane March aged 18, the house maid, Kate Reape aged 17, a laundress and Anne Canning aged 17, a dairy maid. All the servants were from Mayo and Catholic. The house is recorded at this time extending to 18 rooms with 41 outbuildings. By 1911, Cill Alaithe was inhabited by the Scott family, the head of the family John Scott is described as a labourer. Augusta at this time was residing with her sister in Coolcronaun near Foxford. 

A living room filled with furniture and a large window

Description automatically generated, Picture 
A bay window in one of the first floor windows which would have once 
overlooked the Italian gardens 
Photo dates from October 2014 

From reading newspaper reports from the time, it appears that Miss Knox Gore established a stud farm at Cill Alaithe which expanded rapidly from 1898 after the construction of the house. In 1901, it was reported that a horse by the name of Vertigo, bred by Miss Knox Gore, won the Aintree Feather Plate at the Liverpool meeting making this its third win in succession. In August of the same year, Miss Knox Gore’s horses, St. Moritz and Vertigo also won at the Windsor races. In 1906, a horse named Royal Arch ran at Kempton Park was bred by Miss Knox Gore. It was noted at the time that she was a famous horse breeder and had bred successful horses named Glenamoy and Nausicaa, who won at Lingfield in 1905. It was said that the sea air near Cill Alaithe was the reason behind the successful horses she bred. 

An old photo of a tree

Description automatically generated, Picture 
This image of the gardens surround Cill-Alaithe were featured in Country Life magazine in 1902, 
what is interesting above this image is that it would show the gardens soon after they were completed 
     Copyright ICHC 

The grounds surrounding the house are now in the process of being re-established after being over grown for decades but were once envied throughout Ireland and England. Miss Knox Gore had one of the finest collections of rare and exotic trees and at one stage employed four gardeners to keep it in check. Her collection of plants were in the landscaped grounds which she named her Italian garden was featured in Country Life Magazine in 1902. In the magazine, the garden was referred to being eight years old, which would indicate that it was complete by 1894. It was necessary when the garden was being constructed, that the perimeter was surrounded with a double beech hedge to provide protection to the plants from harsh weather. In the garden was planted magnolias, aralias, cordylines, hydrangeas, fuchsias and myrtles. When the French sailed into Killala in 1798, they brought three canons with them. One was left in Killala while the other two travelled with the French to Castlebar, and ended in the grounds of Raheen’s House in Castlebar, subject of an earlier post. It was said that up until the Civil War in Ireland this cannon sat on the lawn of Miss Knox’s house. However it was confiscated during the troubled times of the 1920’s in the mistaken belief that it could still be of some use. The man said to be responsible for the design of the gardens around Augusta’s house in Killala was Mr. John Leybourne, who was once the head garden in Belleek Manor prior to the death of Augusta’s brother Charles. After the departure of Augusta in the 1920’s from Cill-Alaithe, John continued to live in Killala until his death in 1930 and is buried in Ballysokeery graveyard. 

A picture containing outdoor, holding, white, grass

Description automatically generated, Picture 
This is possibly an image of Augusta Knox dating from 1902 in the garden of Cill-Alaithe House 
     Copyright ICHC 

By early 1919, Miss Knox Gore was beginning to divest herself of her holdings of land around Killala and in February of that year, the sale of eight farms owned by Miss Knox was advertised. W.M. Boland was instructed to sell lands at Public Auction at the Courthouse in the town on the 8th of February. It is also mentioned that farm implements and machinery in the yard of Cill Alaithe would also be sold. It says that the implements are by the best manufacturers and are only one year in use. James Gilvarry, a wealthy local man returning from the U.S. bought the house from  Augusta in 1923. She moved to Hadfod, Lon Llandegfan , Menai Bridge Anglesey in Wales and died there in October of 1924 and she is buried in Llandeyfan, Anglesey in Wales. Her will was probated in London in January 1925 by Frederick Hellewell Mills, a barrister and Ethel Theodora Pery. Miss Knox Gore’s estate was valued at £13,492 1s. When Augusta left Killala in 1923 she transported all her belonging from Killala in an old boat, and it is said that when it reached its destination, on the other side of the Irish Sea, that it had barely been unloaded when it heeled over and sank. 
 

An old photo of a forest

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The Italian garden beside Cill-Alaithe, the bottom photo dates from after the 1950’s 
as the palm trees ,present in the above photograph, are missing as they collapsed in a storm 
     Copyright Richard Longfield 

James Gilvarry did not live in the house on a full time basis but a man by the name of Michael Gilvarry, James’s brother, was in residence on occasion. James and his family did return from America to the house on numerous occasions during the summer months and their visits were often recorded in the press. In 1935, James’s daughter Mary Elizabeth was married in the chapel in Killala with the reception taking place afterwards in Cill Alaithe. During one summer in the house, the family entertained the Taoiseach W.T. Cosgrave, whom they also previously entertained in New York. On one occasion, Cosgrave on his return to Ireland from the United States had shamrocks picked from the grounds of Cill Alaithe and sent to James in Amercia as a thank you for his hospitality. In the newspaper The Brooklyn Daily Eagle in June 1936, it was reported that Mrs. James H. Gilvarry and her daughter, Miss Peggy Gilvarry of 66 Maple St., Brooklyn had sailed for Ireland on the Cunard Liner Britannic ( sister ship to the Titanic), to visit their summer home Cill Alaithe in Killala, Co. Mayo. They were to be joined by James H. Gilvarry Jr. who was a student of medicine at Trinity.  Mrs Gilvarry’s husband James would sail later in the month and would spend most of August in Irelandand on the continent. In 1938, James made front page news in New York when he was abducted by two armed men and his car stolen. The property in Killala then passed to James’ daughter Mary Flynn, who often listed the house as her address when advertising pedigree livestock for sale. She had married a man from Leitrim and was based in Ireland on a full time bases. Her father, James, possibly had to curtail his visits to Killala from America as a result of the outbreak of the Second World War. James H. Gilvarry died in 1947  at the age of 71, it was noted in his obituary that he was a lawyer and real estate broker, he died of a heart attack in the Court House in Manhattan.   

A close up of a map

Description automatically generated, Picture 
This OS Map shows the location of August’s Italian garden which occupied 
an area to the side of the house. 
     Copyright OSI 

In early 1941, the Sisters of the Marist Order arrived from France, Belguim and England  at the house in Killala to take refuge as their own convents had been damaged in the bombings during the Second World War. The house was occupied until 1942 by the group of nuns,when it was purchased by Alexander Knox Miller. He maintained the house in a good condition and was always happy to let anybody visit the house and grounds, provided they had asked permission. For a number of years, a local priest Father Guckian lived in the house in Killala, in a small flat. He looked after the house as Mr. Miller lived mostly in Millbrook, Co. Derry, where he still practiced the family profession that gave rise to his surname. In June 1954, there was a dispersal sale of livestock, which was advertised as taking place at Cill-Alaithe under Mr. Miller’s instruction. At the sale, one of the yearling heifers swapped one salubrious residence for another when it was purchased by Mr. P. F. Cooper of Markree Castle in Sligo. The last wedding to take place in this lovely house took place on 7th September, 1963, between Mr. Miller’s daughter, Felicity, and Richard Longfield, whose forebears came from Mallow, Co. Cork. Both groom and bride were graduates of Trinity College, Dublin.  

A boy standing in front of a house

Description automatically generated, Picture 
The green house that once existed to the rear of Cill Alaithe      Copyright Richard Longfield 
A house with trees in the background

Description automatically generated, Picture 
Side Elevation 
Photo dates from October 2014 
Copyright ICHC 

In 1970, Asahi, a local factory, purchased Cill Alaithe House, who intended to maintain the property for use by its employees. In 1988 Asahi granted Killala Community Council permission to lease the house to An Oige for use as a youth hostel. Over the following years the house changed owners a number of times. In 1997 the house appeared on the market for around €320,000 but after a number of bids it was sold to Johnny Mc Carthy for €400,000. During the time that the house was owned by Asahi, its condition deteriorated and original features were lost including the substantial glass house to the rear of the property. Mr. Mc Carthy restored the house, spending over €1 million euros, and placed it back on the market in 2003 for €1.5 million. In 2004, a planning application was lodged by the new owners to Mayo County Council to link the house with the stable block and also construct 72 bedrooms in an effort to turn the house in to a hotel. This plan never materialized and the house appeared again on the market in 2010. New owners were not forth coming as Ireland was in the midst of a financial crisis. In October 2014, the house was sold for €765,000 and the new owners have embraced the prospect of owning a property of this nature and have reinvigorated the house, stables and the gardens in a lavish fashion.   

NOTE :Please note that the text of this article or any of the photograph’s contained within may not be reproduced without the permission of David Hicks 

Rathrobin, Tullamore, Co Offaly – a ruin

Rathrobin, Tullamore, Co Offaly – a ruin

Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Mark Bence-Jones. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London.

p. 240. “(Biddulph/IFR) A house originally built 1694 by Nicholas Biddulph, near an old castle. Rebuilt C19 in irregular Tudor-Revival style; numerous gables, with ball finials; dormers, gabled single-storey porch; mullioned windows. Burnt ca 1920, now a ruin.

Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.
Rathrobin, County Offaly, photograph courtesy of National Inventory.

Listed in Vanishing Country Houses of Ireland by The Knight of Glin, David J. Griffin and Nicholas K. Robinson, published by The Irish Architectural Archive and The Irish Georgian Society, 1988. 

p. 121. 19C Tudor Revival house designed by Sir Thomas Drew for the Biddulph family. Burnt c. 1920. Now a ruin.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/14924005/rathrobin-house-rathrobin-county-offaly

Detached multiple-bay three-storey Tudor Revival country house, built c.1890, with advanced end bay and gabled bays to front. Single-storey return and two-storey canted bay to rear. Burnt c.1920 and now in a ruinous condition. Set within its own grounds. Roof gone. Ashlar and rendered chimneystacks with finials and limestone coping to pediments. Ruled-and-lined render to walls with plinth. Plaque to front elevation with label moulding. Window opening with tooled limestone surrounds and sills and some with limestone mullions and transoms. Pedimented ashlar porch with Tudor arched opening with chamfered limestone surround and label moulding. Random coursed limestone outbuildings to north-west set around yard. Random coursed boundary wall to rear with segmental-arched gateway. 

Rathrobin House was designed by Sir Thomas Drew for the Biddulph family, to replace a house built in 1694. It iis constructed of massed concrete, making it a particularly interesting structure of technical and architectural merit. Now an ivy-covered ruin following its destruction during the 1920s. It retains some of its Tudor Revival features, however, such as the multiple gables, dormers and stone window fixtures, which attest to its one time greatness. Its destruction was recounted by Arthur Magan in ‘The Magans of Ummera’, as this was his mother’s home. Despite its humble present state, Rathrobin House makes a valuable contribution to the architectural heritage of County Offaly. 

In Blake, Tarquin. Abandoned Mansions of Ireland II: More Portraits of Forgotten Stately Homes. Collins Press, Cork, 2012. 

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, D13Y209

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, D13Y209

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

FOR SALE January 2025 courtesy Gallagher Quigley, €2,200,000

5 Bed, 3 Bath, 318 m²

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

“Slieverue” is a splendid Victorian seaside home occupying an elevated site on the peninsula’s favoured Strand Road in Sutton. This detached listed residence provides c.3,400 square feet of flexible accommodation over two storeys with breathtaking panoramic coastal views of Dublin Bay.

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

The sunny westerly aspect provides a spectacular seaside vantage point for evening sunsets, an idyllic setting in a truly remarkable location. This is a home full of character & charm. Situated on either side of the reception hall are the main drawing and dining rooms, spanning the full width of the property. Both spaces are generously proportioned with high ceilings and tall windows revealing the splendid views outside.

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

The less formal accommodation is located to the rear of these main reception rooms. First a cosy sitting room, a galley kitchen and pantry along with access to the rear courtyard and garden beyond. Another neat family room and a breakfast room with access to a utility and laundry area are off a rear hall.

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

Access to the garden is available through a glazed conservatory beside which is a cloak room and a wc.

A fine staircase leads to an oversized landing on the first floor. This bright airy space joins 4 large double bedrooms along with an additional nursery or study which in turn leads into a cute folly, a bow shaped room which reveals the finest view of the bay from Slieverue. The arresting views from the front and gable rooms are startling while the interior is filled with natural day light, due to its sunny orientation.

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

An additional dressing room off the landing is as large as a double bedroom and the main bedroom suite at the front has a shower room ensuite. The main bathroom is located at the rear of the landing. Slieverue’s accommodation comprises 12 principle rooms laid out over two floors with c.2000 square feet downstairs and c.1,400 square feet upstairs. There is ample parking in the driveway and rear courtyard. The rear garden is long and mature and offers some development potential on its own. Further development potential and merger value with neighbouring homes may be possible at a future date should the opportunity arise. The long garden is privately hedged on either side beyond the rear courtyard. The level garden is planted with mature trees and shrubs and is quite private. Slieverue is an endearing seaside home originally crafted as a holiday home in a bygone era. It’s fortunate new owner will relish the exciting opportunity to create a truly special home in this romantic seaside location within a short distance of all the wonderful amenities the Sutton and Howth peninsula has to offer. Viewing is available by appointment with Gallagher Quigley An idyllic seaside location with breath-taking sea views A short walk from Sutton dinghy club, a cherished club where children thrive in sailing fun Beside scenic coastal walks Obvious development potential Panoramic views of Dublin bay Detached period home with character and charm c.3.400 square feet Ample private parking Large gardens Close to Dart and all amenities Beside the seaside strand walks towards Martello tower BER exempt.

Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.
Slieverue, Strand Road, Sutton, Dublin 13, courtesy Gallagher Quigley.

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11366007/slieverue-sutton-strand-sutton-south-co-dublin

Detached double-pile three-bay two-storey house, c.1890, with full-height bowed entrance projection, flanked by Dutch gable-fronted end bays. Refenestrated, c.1990. Cast iron rainwater goods. Bow extension to side elevation. ROOF: Double-pitched and gable-fronted – behind curvilinear-gabled parapets; double-pile; terracotta tile – scalloped / fishscale: red clay ridge tiles; nap rendered chimney stacks; clay pots; cast-iron rainwater goods; flat roof to bows. WALLS: Nap rendered; string course to first floor; moulded coping to Dutch gables; painted. OPENINGS: Square-headed; continuous nap rendered sill courses; lugged architraves; replacement uPVC windows, c.1990; architrave to door opening; replacement uPVC doors, c.1990; stained glass overlight.

Clonmeen, Banteer, Co Cork

Clonmeen, Banteer, Co Cork – whole house airbnb  

Bence-Jones, Mark. A Guide to Irish Country Houses (originally published as Burke’s Guide to Country Houses volume 1 Ireland by Burke’s Peerage Ltd. 1978); Revised edition 1988 Constable and Company Ltd, London. 

p. 87. “Late Victorian house of roughhewn red sandstone ashlar with half-timbered gables. Built 1893 by Stephen Grehan; replacing a Georgian house nearby, which was kept in repair as a secondary residence. Near-symmetrical front with central gable above mullioned window above balustraded porch; single-storey three sided mullioned bow on either side; lower service wing ending in another gable. Impressive top-lit staircase hall; pitch-pine staircase and gallery. Sold ca 1975.” 

The Buildings of Ireland. Cork City and County. Frank Keohane. Yale University Press: New Haven and London. 2020. 

The fortified houses of the late C16 and early C17 constitute a bridge between the medieval tower house and the modern mansion. They were built by old Norman families, at Castle Lyons and Ightermurragh (Ladysbridge); by city merchants, such as the Archdeacons at Monkstown; by English settlers, at Baltimore, Coppinger’s Court (Rosscarbery) and Mallow; and by Gaelic chiefs, at Coolnalong (Durrus), Mount Long (Oysterhaven), Kanturk, Dromaneen (Mallow) and Reendiseart (Ballylickey). Twenty-two such houses survive in Cork. 

In comparison to tower houses, these houses are better lit, have thinner walls, lack vaults, and feature timber floors and staircases as well as integral fireplaces. They are also notably symmetrical in plan and elevation, and some, such as Kanturk, incorporate proto-classical features. They generally retain some defensive features, such as door yetts, gunloops, bartizans and crenellated parapets, [p. 18] although their wall-walks were not all continuous, and in cases such as Mount Long and Monkstown were barely accessible. The other notable feature is the use of towers or turrets, influenced no doubt by the Elizabethan fashion for a quasi-military appearance derived from an earlier chivalric age. The arrangement of the towers gives rise to distinctive plan-forms: U plan (Coolnalong), Y-plan (Mallow and Coppinger’s court), L-plan (Dromaneen (Mallow) and Mossgrove (Templemartin), cross-plan (Kilmaclenine, Ightermurragh), X-plan (Kanturk, Monkstown, Mount Long, Aghadown), Z-plan (Ballyannan (Midleton), and T-Plan (Reendiseart). Baltimore, Carrigrohane, Castle Lyons, Myrtle Grove (Youghal) and Castlemartyr aer simple rectangular blocks. A number of Jacobean bawns with circular corner towers also survive, at Ballinterry (Rathcormac), Dromiscane (Millstreet), Dromagh, Clonmeen (Banteer) and Mossgrove.” 

p. 45. Few significant country houses were built during the latter half of the C19. Most are of small to middling size, often with minimal Tudor or Italian trim. Unpretentious Italianate is found as Lissard (1854-5) near Skibbereen, Farran (1866) and Ballyvolane (1872) near Castlelyons. The finest of these Italianate houses is Montenotte House in Cork, with its double height top-lit cortile in the manner of Barry’s clubs in London. Lewis Villamy designed Lisselane (1851-3) near Clonakilty in a loose French-chateau idiom. Gothic houses are much rarer; exceptions include Dunboy (1866-70) near Castletownbere, a virtuoso Tudor Gothic house wiht mullioned-and-transomed windows mingled with Continental motifs in an assured and robust composition.  

p. 46. With its Scots Baronial stepped gables and corbelled tourelles, Blarney Castle House (1871-5) by the Belfast architect John Lanyon, is unique in Cork. The influence of Ruskin in both detailing and materials can be seen in a number of houses designed by William Atkins: Velvetstown, Ardavilling, and Parknamore. Lettercollum (1872) near Timoleague, by William H. Hill, and Thorncliffe (1865) at Monkstown, by Thomas N. Deane, are in a similar vein. After the 1880s major houses are rare, but there are good late C19 Jacobean interiors at Fota and Lota Lodge (Glanmire). 

The Edwardian Domestic Revival or Free Style, which favoured picturesque forms in brick and terracotta with gables, tall chimneys, tile-hanging, and mullioned and leaded windows, is generally confined to lodges, as at Castletownsend and Castle Mary (Cloyne), and to suburban houses in Cork city. Ashlin’s Clonmeen House (Banteer) is a rare country-house example. The Pavilion at Fitzgerald’s Park, Cork, is also Free Style and incorporates some Art Nouveau decorative elements. The last great country house to be built in Cork is Hollybrook Hall near Skibbereen, in a Free Style employing classical and rustic elements, with a wonderfully eclectic range of interiors. The garden buildings by Harold Peto at Ilnacullin were designed in a similar spirit.” 

http://landedestates.nuigalway.ie/LandedEstates/jsp/property-list.jsp?letter=C

Clonmeen House: 

Built in 1893 for Stephen Grehan and designed by George Ashlin. This house remained in the possession of the Grehan family until the 1970s. In the 1940s the Irish Tourist Association Survey noted it as the residence of Major Grehan. Late in the twentieth century it functioned as a hotel for some time but has now returned to private ownership.   

 
Clonmeen Lodge: 

Hajba writes that this house was the home of Cornelius O’Callaghan in 1750. In 1786 Wilson refers to “Bantyre” as the seat of Mr. Callaghan. Viscount Lismore is recorded as proprietor of Clonmeen in 1814. At the time of Griffith’s Valuation Clonmeen Lodge was occupied by George Grehan and held from Viscount Lismore. It was valued at £7+. The Grehans continued to use this house as a secondary residence while their main residence was in Dublin. In 1893 a much larger house, Clonmeen House, was built close to the lodge. In the 1940s the Irish Tourist Association Survey noted “The Lodge, Banteer” as the residence of Jerome O’Callaghan and stated that the house had originally been built by the Nash family as a fishing lodge. A building is still extant at the site. 

https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/20903114/clonmeen-house-gougane-co-cork

Detached irregular-plan dormered two-storey house over basement, built 1893, facing east. Front elevation has four-bay first floor, three-bay ground floor and gabled projecting entrance bay flanked by canted-bay windows. Porch to entrance, roof having balcony above and supported by engaged columns. Gabled projecting bay to south elevation having box-bay window to east side. Recessed lower five-bay two-storey block to north having gabled end bay to north end. Hipped slate roof to main block, pitched to gables, having decorative terracotta ridge cresting to roof and dormers, with terracotta finials, cast-iron rainwater goods and brick chimneystacks. Half-timbering to gables, entrance gable being jettied, with decorative medallions to bargeboards. Dressed rusticated red sandstone walls with plinth course, having Grehan coat of arms to balcony, with openwork ornamentation to flanking panels. Segmental-headed two and three-light windows to first floor, to ground floor of south projection and to north block, all with timber casement windows. Bay windows have timber mullioned and transomed windows with moulded cornices and hipped roofs. Porch has round-headed doorway with carved timber panelled door having elaborate fanlight and is flanked by round-headed sidelights with elaborate glazing, openings having carved archivolts and being flanked by engaged columns supporting balcony overhead. Columns have decoratively carved capitals and moulded bases. Two moulded limestone steps to doorway. Dormered Gothic-style window to first floor of north block, lighting chapel. Double-height staircase hall with galleries and lit by glazed dome. Entrance gates comprise rusticated limestone square-profile inner and outer piers with plinths and caps, snecked red sandstone quadrant walls with dressed coping stones, and double-leaf vehicular and single-leaf pedestrian cast-iron gates. Three-bay two-storey steward’s house to north having hipped slate roof and rendered walls, with lower four-bay two-storey return and ranges of outbuildings with pitched slate roofs and exposed rubble limestone walls. Demesne also contains woodland, gardens and ornamental lake. 

This house was designed by the well-known church architect, George Ashlin, to replace an earlier, Georgian, house, retained. The building contains a host of architectural details typical of the domestic architecture of the turn of the twentieth century. The ornamentation to the entrance bay is particularly fine. 

https://www.airbnb.ie/rooms/14070429?source_impression_id=p3_1589880931_wGSocB1m2uNh%2BLBX&guests=1&adults=1

My place is close to many activities including adventure parks (ballyhass lakes), golf clubs, fishing, horse riding, trekking and some of the best restaurants in North Cork. You’ll love my place because of the ambiance, outdoors space, and the views. My place is good for families (with kids) or family reunion. Great place for building family memories. 
 
The space 
It is our family holiday home with lots of great family rooms and a good kitchen to hang out with your family, friends and kids. Near Kanturk, Mallow and Millstreet. 40 mins from Cork and Killarney. 
 
Guest access 
There’s a lot of parking in front and at the side of the house.

Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.
Clonmeen House, County Cork, courtesy of airbnb.

https://www.castles.nl/clonmeen-castle

Clonmeen Castle lies in a field south of the river Blackwater, east of the village of Banteer in County Cork in Ireland. 

There may have been an earlier castle at this site, held by Philip O’Mol in the 14th century. In the 1590’s a new castle was built here, probably incorporating  older structures. This new castle probably was built by Connoghor O’Callaghan and was an important seat for the O’Callaghan’s. During the wars of the 1640s, the clan was forfeited and the castle destroyed. I don’t have any other historical information. If you know more, please mail me. 

Clonmeen Castle now consists of a somewhat square bawn with circular flankers at three of its corners.  There is a gap in the wall at the west end of the south side which at present serves as the entrance.There is also a narrow inserted gateway near the north end of the west side. The flanker in the southeast is the best preserved, with several gunloops. There probably was a keep in the center of the bawn, which was demolished and used to build a lime kiln northeast of the castle. 

There isn’t a lot to be seen here and what there is, is quite overgrown. Not very interesting.